Thursday 6th March to Wednesday 11th March-click on the following link to watch the documentaryGlobesity: Fat's New Frontier
Construct an argument which includes cause and effect and valid sources.
Claim - Includes a “cause”
Evidence – Sources are valid: credible, accurate and relatively unbiased.
Reasoning – Includes an “effect” that is supported with data from the “valid evidence”.
Presented in one keynote slide – with your name Please place your Keynote Slide in Mrs Hundley's Inbox on the server and in your correct color folder.
Thursday 26th February to Thursday 6th March-for our first classes, home learning is to readthe following documents and write 5-10 wonderings. Due next class.
Wednesday 25th February - Home Learning due for next class - please read "Global Issues 2015: What is the Future of Food?" and be ready to discuss in our first class on Child Hood Obesity!
"USDA pollsters ask survey questions like: Did you worry that food would run out, that you couldn’t afford balanced means, that you had to cut size of meals, substitute cheaper foods, skip meals, or not eat for an entire day? Households that answer a specified number of such questions affirmatively are said to be “food insecure.” The latest (2012) figure is 49.0 million “food insecure” Americans, or the one-out-of-six figure ..."The Problem Is Obesity Not Hunger (Thoughts On The Food Stamps Debate) by Paul Rodrick Gregory
Thursday 6th March to Wednesday 11th March - click on the following link to watch the documentary Globesity: Fat's New Frontier
Construct an argument which includes cause and effect and valid sources.
Presented in one keynote slide – with your namePlease place your Keynote Slide in Mrs Hundley's Inbox on the server and in your correct color folder.
Thursday 26th February to Thursday 6th March - for our first classes, home learning is to read the following documents and write 5-10 wonderings. Due next class.
Wednesday 25th February - Home Learning due for next class - please read "Global Issues 2015: What is the Future of Food?" and be ready to discuss in our first class on Child Hood Obesity!
"USDA pollsters ask survey questions like: Did you worry that food would run out, that you couldn’t afford balanced means, that you had to cut size of meals, substitute cheaper foods, skip meals, or not eat for an entire day? Households that answer a specified number of such questions affirmatively are said to be “food insecure.” The latest (2012) figure is 49.0 million “food insecure” Americans, or the one-out-of-six figure ..."The Problem Is Obesity Not Hunger (Thoughts On The Food Stamps Debate) by Paul Rodrick GregoryChild Obesity, Definition, Causes, Symptoms, Risk Factors, Complications
Global Epidemic of Childhood Obesity: Poverty, Urbanization and the Nutrition Transition
Food Insecurity and Obesity: Understanding the Connections